On behalf of numerous co-sponsoring organizations, the SAGE Center is proud to announce the following series of events to celebrate Women's History Month. This celebration was first ordained by presidential proclamation as Women's History Week in 1980, and expanded to the full month of March in 1988. The National Women's History Project provides an annual theme, and this year the theme is "Weaving the Stories of Women's Lives." We hope you plan to support one or more of these events and take time to consider how integral the many threads of womens' influence have been in your own life's tapestry.

This documentary brings together women to talk about the plight of women in Muslim-majority societies and the effects of "honor violence."

The Educational Theatre Collaborative (ETC) at Plymouth State University announces auditions for its January 2015 production of “The Sound of Music.” Performances will be held January 21-25 at the Silver Center for the Arts, under the direction of ETC Cofounder and Artistic Director Trish Lindberg.

Auditions for this popular musical will be held at The Silver Center:

Sunday November 16*

1–2:30 p.m.: children grades 3 and 4

3–4:30 p.m.: children grades 5 and 6

5–6:30 p.m.: grades 7 and 8

7–9:30 p.m.: high school and university students, alumni, faculty, staff and community members**

Monday, November 17 and Tuesday, November 18

4­–5:30 p.m.: children grades 3-8*

6:30–9:30 p.m.: high school and university students, alumni, faculty, staff and community members**

Wednesday, November 19

4–6:30 p.m.: Callbacks for grade 3-8 students

7:30–9:30 p.m.: Callbacks and auditions for high school and university students and adults.

Volunteers will direct auditioners to the correct room for their audition.

* November 16 is the preferred date for children in grades 3–8. This age group does not have to prepare anything in advance or schedule an individual time.

**All who addition in this category must contact Brenda Gleich at (603) 535-2803 or bgleich@plymouth.edu to schedule an individual time and should bring a piece of prepared music.

The Plymouth State Skating Academy is offering their next Group Figure Skating & Beginner Hockey Lessons beginning Sunday, Oct 26th at the Hanaway Rink. Each session is $80 for 6 weeks. Save $20 by signing up for multiple sessions and save $10 per additional child. To register or for more information, visit http://www.plymouth.edu/arena/learn-to-skate/ or write us at psu-icearena@plymouth.edu

The Bachelor of Fine Arts exhibition celebrates students graduating from PSU’s intense, highly focused professional programs. The Silver Center for the Arts features graphic design majors’ work to create and define a fictitious company and to spend the year producing a broad range of applications including logos, stationery, advertisements, posters, pamphlets, and publications.

Presented in collaboration with the New Hampshire Art Educators’ Association, a professional organization for art educators from every level of instruction and those interested in the future of art education. For over 25 years, NHAEA has provided an exemplary networking opportunity and collegial support for art educators throughout New Hampshire. For this exhibit, art teachers from more than 30 schools have selected works from their students, creating a visual presentation that not only displays the imagination and skill of the students, but also the guidance and creativity of the teachers. A wonderful exhibit for potential art teachers to experience! Professional development workshops for art educators and artists are available for this exhibit.

The visual arts are alive, diverse, and thriving at Plymouth State University! Every year, students from all levels of art making submit their best efforts to this competitive exhibition. Visiting jurors from regional art galleries and arts organizations select excellent works from each level of instruction including an independent level that encourages and nurtures independent, self-directed creativity.

Mr. Charles Bayless, prior President and Provost, West Virginia University Institute of Technology, and retired Utility Executive presents:

"Climate Change and Ocean Acidification, our greatest challenge"

Mr. Bayless has had a long, diverse career in the Energy Sector and works closely with climate scientists. He is currently a board member of Pike Electric and Chair of the Audit Committee, Recycled Energy Development and West Virginia American Water. He is Chair of the Arctic Climate Action Steering Committee and a board member at the Climate Institute. He has served as President and CEO of Illinova Corporation (Illinois Power Company, among others), and of Tucson Electric Power Company (UniSource Energy). He was also Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Public Service Company of New Hampshire, and served as Chairman of Essential Power, Independent Wireless One, Ontario Power Authority, West Virginia Industrial Council

In 1993, Financial World awarded Mr. Bayless its CEO of the Year Bronze Medal. Also in 1993, the Wall Street Transcript named Mr. Bayless the winner of its CEO of the Year Bronze Medal. In 1995, Financial World awarded Mr. Bayless its CEO of the Year Silver Medal.

A multimedia performance featuring two pianos, highlighted by Bizet’s Carmen Fantasy. Deborah Martin is Professor of Piano at Ithaca College and Director of the Summer Piano Institute there. She has a doctorate in piano literature and pedagogy from Indiana University. Jairo Geronymo is a native of Brazil and currently is teaching at the Leo Kestenberg Musikschule in Berlin, Germany, where he teaches piano, coordinates workshops, and directs piano camps. He has a doctorate from the University of Washington.

Featuring an evening of new one-act plays written and directed by PSU students, Playwrights Showcase 2015 offers audiences new voices, visions, and values for our time. Experience the exciting, rich talent that defines the developing theatre artist at PSU. Our Playwrights Showcase, a series of staged, rehearsed readings, is always an exceptional event that captures the imaginations of audiences, while allowing for the creative development of our writers and directors. Don’t miss this rare opportunity to see the future of the American theatre today.

The Plymouth State University Symphonic Band welcomes Swedish Flautist Göran Marcusson for a performance of classics and new works for wind ensemble, including Philip Sparke’s A Lindisfarne Rhapsody for flute and concert band.

Guest artist Paul Max Tipton, baritone-bass, collaborates with faculty member Dan Perkins, piano, in presenting Robert Schumann's song cycle of Heinrich Heine poetry, Liederkreis, opus 24. Described by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution as a dignified and beautiful singer, Tipton enjoys an active career in opera, oratorio and chamber music and has performed and recorded throughout North America.

The devised, one-man show by Robin Marcotte, Dottie, stunningly examines how people suffering from dementia perceive the world. Dottie received its premiere in Philadelphia, where it garnered critical praise. Philadelphia Weekly observed, “This aerial ballet is just one of many memorable images in Marcotte’s rich and rewarding play,” and the Currier Post exclaimed, “And when Dottie, begowned again, dances on air with a mirror, the show achieves a singular, and singularly heartbreaking, power.” You’ll be moved by Dottie’s resilience, touched by her perseverance and inspired by her determination to make sense of her diminishing world. (Dottie is made possible in part by a grant from the Smart Family Foundation.)

The Educational Theater Collaborative presents the musical Sound of Music, featuring a Rodgers and Hammerstein score, professional costumes and set as well as a cast of local PSU faculty, staff and community members from the Plymouth area. And the beautiful story of Maria and the Family Von Trapp. ETC will bring the hills alive with the Sound of Music this January.

The Plymouth State University Symphonic Band, under the direction of Mark Stickney, will be performing new works in our brand new fall concert. They will be joined on stage by the Plymouth State University Percussion Ensemble, under the direction of Tim Gilmore.

Actress Elizabeth Daily and pianist Allan DiBiase offer an evening of Poetry and Textural Music that includes Ms. Daily performing dramatic readings of poetry, ranging from the contemplative to the comedic, accompanied by Dr. DiBiase on the piano. Included are works by Shakespeare, Emily Dickinson, Jane Kenyon, and Liz Ahl.

Living in the Momentis engaging, enlightening, and innovative. Experience and celebrate the innumerable moments that define the complexity, challenges, and memorable times of our lives.

The Alumni Relations Office invites PSU employee alumni to join us for a campus tradition, the Employee-Alumni Luncheon. The luncheon is on Monday, August 25, 2014, at noon on Mary Lyon Lawn. This is a great opportunity to connect with friends and colleagues and enjoy a meal together.

In the event of rain, the luncheon will be moved to the Hage Room at the HUB.

The luncheon is compliments of the PSU Alumni Association. Register here to let us know you are coming!

The purpose of this residential program for young writers entering grades 9-12 is to create a community of writers to share in the art of writing.

Together we will read as writers and explore genres of writing, including poetry, prose and memoir. Participants will partake in writing activities that will help strengthen their craft through quick writes, prompts, revision exercises and conferencing with both instructors and peers. Young writers will have the opportunity to experience collaborative work with members of the other writing camps on campus, as well as, the NWPNH Summer Institute for teachers.

Students will stay in a PSU dormitory supervised by program counselors and participate in evening activities. Activities may include: ice-skating, open mic or movie nights, trips to downtown, visiting authors and hikes/walks.

Families will be invited to hear the writing created at the Institute during an open mic celebration on Friday afternoon.

The National Writing Project in New Hampshire (formerly known as the Plymouth Writing Project) is dedicated to improving the teaching of writing in our nation’s schools. Since 2002, we have offered summer institutes for the best teachers of writing in the state. Each summer we offer unique day camp experiences specifically for young writers.

This camp will allow children to explore journals in many forms. We will use book and papermaking techniques to create journals for quotes, poetry, and art. For our nature journal we will record our observations outdoors and undertake a recycled art and writing project. Also, integrating writing, art, technology, and science, we will create an electrifyingly fun journal that contains actual working circuits and LED lights!

Make Music Plymouth is an all-day, open-access, free festival taking place in downtown Plymouth, New Hampshire on June 21st, 2014. Participation is encouraged from all ages, genres and abilities, from indie rock to bluegrass to a cappella, from music students to professional artists and everything in between. This celebration is not limited to residents of Plymouth, but invites music and fun enthusiasts from everywhere to come participate by performing, attending or volunteering. Join us to ring in the summer solstice as part of an international event with its heart and soul in our local community!

Experience Plymouth firsthand at one of our many Open House and Admitted Student events! Tour campus, try the food, and meet a panel of current PSU students. You can even sit down with faculty in your academic area of interest!

For all events, pre-registration is strongly recommended.

Registration begins at 8:45 a.m. in Silver Center for the Arts Lobby on the day of Open House.

Wunderlich’s first book, The Anchorage, received the Lambda Literary Award and Mark Doty said Wunderlich’s second book, Voluntary Servitude “is a bold, memorable accomplishment." A third volume of poems titled The Earth Avails, is due out this year. Wunderlich has taught in the graduate writing programs at Columbia University, Sarah Lawrence College, Ohio University and San Francisco State University. He currently teaches at Bennington College and is Director of Poetry at Bennington—a series of on-campus readings, lectures and short residencies by prominent American and international poets.

About the Eagle Pond Authors' Series

For the past 17 years, the Eagle Pond Authors’ Series has celebrated great writing by some of the nation’s outstanding authors. The series is a tribute to beloved poet and author Donald Hall, who is the heart and soul of this series and instrumental in bringing nationally and internationally revered poets to the PSU campus.

Generous support from the Follett Higher Education Group (PSU Bookstore) helps to keep this series free to the public. Receptions and book signings follow each reading. Free tickets are available in advance to ensure admittance.

Ellen Bryant Voigt is the author of several poetry collections, including her most recent, Headwaters: Poems that Publishers Weekly said is “defined by a liquid precision.” The poems in this collection—with no punctuation and no capitalization—read “as though she has burst in on each poem mid-thought.” Voigt was nominated for the National Book Award for Shadow of Heaven and Messenger: New and Selected Poems, 1976-2006 which was also a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Poetry. Voigt served as Vermont’s state poet from
1999-2003. She developed and directed the nation’s first low-residency writing program at Goddard College in Plainfield, Vermont. She now teaches at the low-residency MFA program at Warren Wilson College in Swannanoa, N.C.

About the Eagle Pond Authors' Series

For the past 17 years, the Eagle Pond Authors’ Series has celebrated great writing by some of the nation’s outstanding authors. The series is a tribute to beloved poet and author Donald Hall, who is the heart and soul of this series and instrumental in bringing nationally and internationally revered poets to the PSU campus.

Generous support from the Follett Higher Education Group (PSU Bookstore) helps to keep this series free to the public. Receptions and book signings follow each reading. Free tickets are available in advance to ensure admittance.

Tig Notaro is busier than she’s ever been doing stand-up, appearing frequently on Conan, recording her popular podcast Professor Blastoff and appearing in movies like In a World, Shreveport, and Walk of Shame. Many people know her from her hilarious story about a series of run-ins with ’80s pop star Taylor Dayne featured on This American Life. Then, in 2012, Notaro endured a series of back-to-back health crises and personal tragedies that would put most careers on indefinite hold. Instead, she took to the stage. A tweet from Louis C.K. the next day read: “I’ve seen a handful of truly great, masterful standup sets. One was Tig Notaro….” The set was recorded and became the best-selling comedy album of the year and nominated for a Grammy. Look for her upcoming Showtime special Knock Knock, It’s TigNotaro, in which she’ll perform comedy in peoples’ basements, backyards, and barns.

The final concert of Senior Campers – program includes multiple piano ensembles, digital keyboard orchestras, percussion ensemble and vocal ensemble.

Compositions to be performed include works by Grieg, Rodgers & Hammerstein, and Sousa, and familiar
songs from The Sound of Music and the Pink Panther. Numerous pieces by Robert Vandall, the conductor of this years 's multiple piano ensembles, will also be performed.

Tickets are available for $8 at the Silver Center Box Office. You can buy tickets online or call the box office at 603-535-2787.

Mindflight is a residential program at Plymouth State University for middle school students, offering enriching, interdisciplinary experiences taught by teams of university faculty, classroom teachers and artists.

Among the PSU facilities that will be utilized are the state-of-the-art computer laboratories, the Silver Cultural Arts Center, art studios, Boyd Science Center, Environmental Science labs, Lamson Library, graphic design computer lab, Hartman Student Union Building and the recreational facilities of the PSU Field House. Students will be housed in a University residence hall with counselors.

Projects include:

Ecological Expeditions

Multimedia Madness

Acting, Acrobatic and Absolute Theatre

Video Ventures

Mindflight is open to high achieving, motivated students currently completing the 6th, 7th and 8th grades. Selection for participation will be based on each student’s academic performance and teacher recommendations. Apply online or by completing the form below.

Plymouth State is connected with Brown, Duke, the California Institute of Technology and Mahatma Gandhi University in Kerala, India, through an inter-institutional collaboration sponsored by the Obama Singh 21st Century Knowledge Initiative.

Dr. C.T. Aravinakumar, Professor and Director of the School of Environmental and Atmospheric Sciences at Mahatma Gandhi University will join us for a lunch-time discussion of his work on air and water pollutants as well as the joint program of the Indian and US federal governments to promote collaboration among universities in our countries.

This discussion will give you an opportunity to explore possible further research and collaboration on water, air, and environmental quality issues with Indian and other colleagues. Bring your lunch!

Healthy PSU is sponsoring a 4-week series of noontime sessions for anyone interested in learning how to meditate! Gina will introduce a variety of ways to use meditation to become “stress resilient”, to increase happiness, decrease suffering and enjoy life more fully. Each session will include a brief talk/discussion followed by a relaxation and meditation experience. Each week will introduce a different type of meditation! If you are ready to adopt a new practice to improve health, this workshop series is for you!

When: Wednesdays, April 9-April 30th

Time: 12 noon-1:00 pm

Where: Frost Commons Lounge

Registration is required: by e-mail at healthy-healthy-psu@plymouth.edu or at the
“Savor the Flavor” Event on March 25th at the Union Grille (11am-1pm). Deadline to Register is April 2nd

Workshops are at no cost for full-time faculty and staff. Limited enrollment, sign up early!

The Plymouth State University Department of Art Visiting Artist Series will present a discussion with Fawn Atencio from 4–5 p.m. Tuesday, March 11. The program will be held in Room 314 at the Draper and Maynard Building (D&M) on North Main Street in Plymouth. An exhibition of her work will hang in the Collins Gallery at D&M through March 15.

Atencio says, “My work reflects an interest in geography and in our relationships to the places which we inhabit. In most works, images of nature and personal experiences are used to tell a story. I remember a moment, and want to give part of that back to the universe, not to record, but to retell as I see it.”

Atencio’s work has been shown and is in private collections internationally and nationally. Additional information and examples of the artist’s work are online at songlinespress.com.

How Wealth Inequality is Wrecking the World and What We Can Do About It

Chuck Collins,senior scholar at the Institute for Policy Studies in Washington, DC

The gap between rich and poor is the widest it has been in a century, and our national conversation about how to address this challenge is polarized. Collins will discuss the impact of inequality and the path toward an economy that works for everyone.

Chuck Collins is a senior scholar at the Institute for Policy Studies in Washington, DC, where he directs the Program on Inequality and the Common Good, and is well known for his efforts to bridge the national debate on wealth inequality and taxes. He is cofounder of Wealth for the Common Good and the Patriotic Millionaires, two efforts to organize members of the 1 percent to advocate for fair tax policy.

Collins is co-author with Bill Gates Sr. of Wealth and Our Commonwealth: Why America Should Tax Accumulated Fortunes, and co-author of The Moral Measure of the Economy, about Christian ethics and economic life. His most recent book is 99 to 1: How Wealth Inequality is Wrecking the World and What We Can Do About It.

All Sidore lectures are free and open to the public. Tickets are required and may be picked up at the Silver Center Box Office. Reservations are recommended: call (603) 535-ARTS. A reception with light refreshments follows each lecture.

On Friday, November 22nd, from 6:30 to 8:30 pm, please join us at the Common Man Inn in Plymouth for a memorable evening! Whether you are a current Languages & Linguistics student or are simply interested in finding out how language study can enrich your chosen field, we invite you to hear Plymouth State University alumni talk about how they have leveraged their degree in foreign language since graduation. A group of current students will also discuss how studying abroad has enhanced their language learning experience.

The evening will include a panel discussion, followed by hors d'oeuvres and drinks.

Were you born before 1952? Would you benefit from a personal exercise program to improve balance and functional fitness? Please consider being a volunteer client for the Physical Activity and Aging class project involving balance and functional fitness testing.

Subjects are needed to participate on Monday, Wednesday and Friday November 18, 20 and 22, from 1:25-2:15 pm in the D&M Building. Student practitioners who have been trained will administer a simple questionnaire and a series of physical tests based on activities of daily living. The outcome of this testing will be a written report and personalized exercise recommendations.

If interested please respond by November 8 to Barbara McCahan at bmccahan@plymouth.edu. Come wearing clothes comfortable for walking.

The presentation will highlight Ray Reimold’s work with the State of New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services Spill Response and Complaint Investigation Section. From home heating oil spills to tanker truck rollovers to sunken boats to meth labs, Ray’s position allows him to take on uncharted challenges daily. He works on a side of the environmental science field that is hands-on and action-packed, and brings him to the far corners of New Hampshire at all hours of the night in all types of weather.

Ray is a 2008 graduate of Plymouth State University’s Center for The Environment with a Master of Science degree in Environmental Science and Policy, working under Dr. Steve Kahl. Since 2008, he has been employed by the State of New Hampshire, as a member of the Spill Response and Complaint Investigation Section for New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services. He is also a Firefighter/Emergency Medical Technician on the Hebron Fire Department and an Officer/Hazardous Material Technician on the Central NH Hazardous Material Team.

The Educational Theatre Collaborative (ETC), a 2013 Moss Hart Award winner for excellence in community and children’s theater, announces auditions for its 20th anniversary production ofOliver!

Performances will be held January 22-26, 2014.

Auditions for this popular musical, directed by Trish Lindberg, artistic director and co-founder of ETC, will be held as follows: [Those pre-cast at last year’s auditions should audition again to ensure current information and interest. ]

Sunday, November 10

12:30 –2 p.m.: children grades 3 and 4

2:30–4 p.m.: children grades 5 and 6

4:30–6 p.m.: grades 7 and 8

6:30–9:30 p.m.: high school students, university students, faculty, staff and community members**

Monday, November 11

3:30–5 p.m.: children grades 3 through 5

5:30–6:30 p.m.: grades 6 through 8

7–9:30 p.m.: high school students, university students, faculty, staff and community members**

Tuesday, November 12

3:30–5 p.m.: Grades 3 through 8

6–9:30 p.m.: high school students, university students, faculty, staff and community members**

Wednesday, November 13

6–9 p.m. Call backs as needed.

**High school students, university students, faculty, staff and community members must come prepared with a song and schedule an audition time by calling Brenda Gleich at (603) 535-2803 or bgleich@plymouth.edu.

Alumni and parents/family of current students, please make plans to join us on October 4-6 for a weekend celebrating the best of Plymouth State University! With athletic contests, music, comedy, theater, food, golf … there really is something for everyone.

It’s not too late to join us! Online registration is now closed, but many events are open for walk-up attendance.

Plymouth State University’s TIGER (Theatre Integrating Guidance, Education and Responsibility) presents Transitions, an educational production based on the writings of Plymouth State University students about sensitive issues that cause students stress. The production uses theatre, music and dance to illustrate ways in which college age students can cope with the stressors of college life and make positive choices for themselves and others.

The production is funded under a three-year Garrett Lee Smith Campus Suicide Prevention Grant by the U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) in conjunction with TIGER and the National Alliance on Mental Illness of New Hampshire (NAMI-NH).

The performances are acceptable for high school and college-age students and adults. There is no charge for admission.

Join us for lunch and practice your Spanish in a very informal setting (or just enjoy hearing the language!). It doesn’t matter what level you are; we welcome everyone, from beginner to fluent speakers.

Viewers will experience the powerful and dynamic touch of the artist in her presentations of people in their natural, day-to-day moments. Her artistic inspiration is the human form, and the figure in environments, in communities and the self. Her process involves expressive mark-making through the integration of drawing and painting and the search for just the right note.

Jayne Adams has been the recipient of three Currier Gallery of Art Awards from the NH Art Association and the Currier Museum. She has also received the Lacroix Award for painting, the Holland Sister’s Award and others.

Charles Gibson is the principal of a multidisciplinary design practice with expertise in environmental graphic design. This exhibition presents a selection of more than 20 collaborative communications solutions for clients in education, healthcare, business, community development, architecture, landscape architecture, and the arts. The exhibit also includes highlights from Gibson’s team’s 1993 prize-winning submission to The Electric Vehicle and the American Community, a National Planning and Design Competition hosted by the Smithsonian Institution.

Plymouth State University’s TIGER (Theatre Integrating Guidance, Education and Responsibility) presents Transitions, an educational production based on the writings of Plymouth State University students about sensitive issues that cause students stress. The production uses theatre, music and dance to illustrate ways in which college age students can cope with the stressors of college life and make positive choices for themselves and others. The production is funded under a three-year Garrett Lee Smith Campus Suicide Prevention Grant by the U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.

The performances are acceptable for high school and college-age students and adults. There is no charge for admission.

Attorneys Howard and Ruoff discuss the constitutional principle behind the right to counsel, even when you know the defendant is guilty, and the role of attorneys as teachers in geopolitics.

Mark Howard’s career in law spans more than 25 years, during which time he has worked for private law practices and served publicly, first as assistant attorney general, and later as chief of appeals for the District of New Hampshire. Over the years he has prosecuted hundreds of violent crimes, drug offenses, and white-collar crimes.

David Ruoff launched his career as staff attorney for the New Hampshire Public Defender, and subsequently joined the Rockingham County Attorney’s Office, where he prosecuted numerous high-profile cases. Following a six-and-a-half-year stint with the state attorney general’s office, where he prosecuted homicides, environmental, and public integrity crimes, he entered into private law practice. Ruoff’s practice is focused primarily on state and federal criminal defense, as well as civil litigation.

All Sidore lectures are free and open to the public, but reservations are recommended. A reception follows each lecture. For reservations or to arrange special accommodations, call (603) 535-ARTS.

The Karl Drerup Art Gallery exhibition program is pleased to present the 2nd "Summer at The Silver Center" juried exhibition of works by members of the New Hampshire Art Association [NHAA]. The exhibit is on display in the atrium of the Silver Center for the Arts on the Plymouth State University campus July 5-August 16, presenting some of the best artists from around the state in a reprise of last summer's outstanding exhibit.

This year's juror is Tom Driscoll, well known New Hampshire painter and faculty member at PSU. His work can be seen at the McGowan Art Gallery in Concord.

The New Hampshire Art Association is a non-profit professional art association founded in 1940. It is one of the oldest statewide art associations in the country. It consists over 420 members of painters, photographers, watercolorists, printmakers, sculptors, and other fine artists living and working primarily in New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Maine, and Vermont.

Thursday, Aug. 15, 2:00 p.m.
Smith Recital Hall, Silver Center for the Arts
The Silver Center for the Arts at Plymouth State University hosts professional actors from the Papermill Theatre in Lincoln throughout the summer, presenting their repertoire of children’s stories adapted for the stage.Performances are 2 p.m. each Thursday.

The final production for the season will be Hansel and Gretel. Hansel and Gretel are always getting into trouble. Will they have gone too far after meeting a witch with a peculiar house?

The North Country Center for the Arts Children’s Theatre has been delighting audiences for more than 20 years, with original adaptations of fairytales and folktales produced and created for children of all ages. Shows are approximately 40 minutes long and appeal to adults, and children three years and older. Characters greet the audience in the Silver Center lobby after each show.

]]>http://thisweek.blogs.plymouth.edu/2013/05/17/papermill-theatre-performance-of-hansel-and-gretel/feed/0Papermill Theatre Performance of Just So Storieshttp://thisweek.blogs.plymouth.edu/2013/05/17/papermill-theatre-performance-of-just-so-stories/
http://thisweek.blogs.plymouth.edu/2013/05/17/papermill-theatre-performance-of-just-so-stories/#commentsFri, 17 May 2013 17:10:10 +0000http://thisweek.blogs.plymouth.edu/?p=11426

Aug ’13

8

2:00 pm

Thursday, Aug. 8, 2:00 p.m.
Smith Recital Hall, Silver Center for the Arts
The Silver Center for the Arts at Plymouth State University hosts professional actors from the Papermill Theatre in Lincoln throughout the summer, presenting their repertoire of children’s stories adapted for the stage.Performances are 2 p.m. each Thursday.

This week's production is Just So Stories. How did the Camel get his hump? How did the leopard get his spots? How was the alphabet made? Discover the answers to these questions and may more as Rudyard Kipling’s stories come to life.

The North Country Center for the Arts Children’s Theatre has been delighting audiences for more than 20 years, with original adaptations of fairytales and folktales produced and created for children of all ages. Shows are approximately 40 minutes long and appeal to adults, and children three years and older. Characters greet the audience in the Silver Center lobby after each show.

Thursday, Aug. 1, 2:00 p.m.
Smith Recital Hall, Silver Center for the Arts
The Silver Center for the Arts at Plymouth State University hosts professional actors from the Papermill Theatre in Lincoln throughout the summer, presenting their repertoire of children’s stories adapted for the stage.Performances are 2 p.m. each Thursday.

This week's production is Rapunzel. Rapunzel has only ever known the world from her tower, but when she is introduced to a handsome prince, together they discover a larger world of magic, fun and friendship.

The North Country Center for the Arts Children’s Theatre has been delighting audiences for more than 20 years, with original adaptations of fairytales and folktales produced and created for children of all ages. Shows are approximately 40 minutes long and appeal to adults, and children three years and older. Characters greet the audience in the Silver Center lobby after each show.

Thursday, Jul. 25, 2:00 p.m.
Smith Recital Hall, Silver Center for the Arts
The Silver Center for the Arts at Plymouth State University hosts professional actors from the Papermill Theatre in Lincoln throughout the summer, presenting their repertoire of children’s stories adapted for the stage.Performances are 2 p.m. each Thursday.

This week's production is The Hunchback of Notre Dame. Quasimodo has always been bullied by the people of the town. After they play a mean trick on him, Quasimodo and a beautiful Gypsy friend, Esmeralda, decide to turn the tables, teach the town a lesson, and help everyone to learn the value of friendship, kindness and never to bully.

The North Country Center for the Arts Children’s Theatre has been delighting audiences for more than 20 years, with original adaptations of fairytales and folktales produced and created for children of all ages. Shows are approximately 40 minutes long and appeal to adults, and children three years and older. Characters greet the audience in the Silver Center lobby after each show.